Chennai: Bonhomie between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M K Stalin was on full display on Saturday during the former's visit here, as it came in the backdrop of persistent political face-offs between the ruling DMK in the state and the BJP. Incidentally, BJP state chief K Annamalai, who has already levelled allegations of irregularities against the ruling dispensation, has said he will soon release what he described as a "corruption list" involving the DMK ministers.
Modi was received by Stalin on Saturday afternoon at the airport here. The PM was in the city to attend various official engagements. After a warm reception at the Chennai Airport, the CM, also the DMK president, briefly held the PM's hand and patted on the back of the latter's palm while walking through the displays exhibited at the new Chennai airport terminal.
The display of camaraderie comes at a time when the DMK is politically opposed to the BJP at the Centre and Stalin batting for a Congress-led opposition unity against the NDA government. The state leaders of the two parties have been sparring over a number of issues.
The warm gesture between the two top leaders also came just hours after the PM had launched a political tirade on the leadership of the Telangana where he had visited earlier in the day. Telangana Chief Minister K Chandrashekhara Rao did not attend PM Modi's event in Hyderabad.
While speaking at Hyderabad after inaugurating railway projects and developmental schemes, Modi attacked the Telangana state leadership for "obstructing" the developmental projects being implemented in there by the Centre. Telangana Governor Tamilisai Soundararajan was seated on stage as the PM launched his attack on the state leadership.
It was after the events in Telangana that the Prime Minister reached Chennai airport around 2.45 pm. Tamil Nadu has been witnessing war of words between the DMK and the opposition BJP apart from the ruling dispensation's issues with the state governor, RN Ravi. Ravi had very recently kicked up a political storm by saying the 2018 anti-Sterlite protests by people were completely "foreign-funded".